maybe
People who who have a habit of listening to loud music can lose there hearing. Infact, many muscians become hearing impaired after years of loud music. In general the exposure to any type of loud music can damage one's hearing.
Yes. Listening to loud music can damage the ear. This is really true with the ear buds that people often use. Many singers have hearing loss. One that I know about is Sting.
Music waves themselves are not harmful to humans. However, listening to music at high volumes for prolonged periods can damage hearing and lead to conditions like tinnitus. It is important to practice safe listening habits and take breaks to protect your hearing.
loud music
Listening to music at a high volume can overstimulate the hair cells in the inner ear, causing temporary hearing loss or damage. This can lead to a feeling of loudness or ringing in the ears. It is important to protect your ears by listening to music at a reasonable volume to prevent long-term hearing damage.
Listening to music will affect your body in various way. Smooth music can be therapeutic while loud music will be noise and it can impair your hearing and cause stress.
Probably not. Depends on the decibel level and how long you're listening to it. If it's loud enough to damage your hearing, you desperately need to get an HVAC person over to fix it.
Yes, if you play loud music through earphones, you can permanently damage your hearing.
If it is too loud, it can permanently damage your hearing.
Loud music can affect anyone's hearing, including a 2 year old.
If you mean that your ears ring (tinnitus) after listening to loud music, you may be dangerously close to permanently damaging your hearing, or you may already be beyond that point. Your hearing CAN be damaged, and it CAN be damaged permanently. Being young does NOT mean that your hearing organs will ALWAYS spring back. One danger for young people who love loud music is that as hearing begins to decline, there is a need for louder music which of course will speed the damage.If you are talking about ringing in the ears, please find a nearby hearing clinic (I believe that Beltone clinics do hearing assessments without charge) and get tested. Whether your hearing is normal, damaged or even superior, take the ringing as a sign that you must start protecting your hearing now in order to avoid living the rest of your life with hearing impairments. If your hearing happens to be normal or superior and you take this as a sign that you can abuse your hearing as much as you like, then I would like to talk with you in ten years-- assuming, that is, that you can still hear in ten years.Do you actually physically hear the music faintly, or is it more like hearing some catchy tune and then you 'can't get it out of your head' for the rest of the day? If you have the experience of physically hearing the music faintly, it could still be related to a hearing problem. After all, you did specify that this happens to you after listening to loud music, not just any music. I am not a physician or hearing specialist, but faintly hearing sounds after listening to loud music may still be related to overstimulation of the hearing mechanisms in the ear.
Loud sound damages ears because every sound is a sound wave. The louder the sound the heaver the wave. That is also why you can see things vibrate when loud music is playing. This great sound wave can also hit hard against your ear drums. Sometimes to much can lead to hearing loss.